Great Parks of Hamilton County (GPHC) owns or manages over 17,666 acres of open space and has a unique mandate to manage 80% of all park land in a natural state for conservation purposes. Their 2019 Comprehensive Master Plan builds on their mission to preserve and protect natural resources with a central goal of becoming “a recognized leader in conservation.” As the master planning team, led by MKSK, moved from comprehensive planning into concept-level plans for each park, Biohabitats created a Natural Resources Framework to identify the best investment opportunities for conservation and ecological restoration within each park and guide related operations and communication by the Natural Resources Department.
Working closely with GPHC, Biohabitats developed a three-part Framework Plan. The first element was a natural resource assessment, which catalogs, identifies threats to, and recommends management actions to protect and restore GPHC’s natural resources. The second element establishes system-wide goals and management best practices for each of thirteen ecological communities present in the parks. The third element of the framework offers guidance for addressing specific, county-wide challenges such as defining priorities for land acquisition.
Biohabitats also helped GPHC prioritize management actions and ecological restoration opportunities in each of Hamilton County’s parks, and developed some site-specific concept plans for priority restoration projects.
Owner: MKSK
Bioregion: Ohio River
Ecoregion: Pre-Wisconsinan Drift Plains
Physiographic province: Central Lowland
Watershed: Sycamore Creek-Little Miami River